A moment’s pause. Then Robin came around hard and fired at another Substantive.
It stopped scooping up dust, listed over to one side, and began to drift.
“That’s it!” Del yelled. “Come on, guys!”
They went after the Substantives in earnest, hitting them one after another. One after another, they went down. But more and more of them came out of the Nebula. Maj started to worry, for her power conduits were beginning to complain. You could not run an Arbalest forever like this — you had to take it home and fuel it once in a while. And then there was the matter of—
“Uh-oh,” said Robin.
“What?” Maj said, looking all around her. It was a tone of voice she usually only heard from Robin when they were badly outnumbered.
“They’re moving again, Maj.”
She looked back, and felt like swearing. One of the Substantives that she had shot up with her returned cannons was indeed moving, struggling…coming back to life.
Nonetheless she turned around again, wondering how they were going to pull this out without having to go back to base and charge, then come back again. The damage to Laurent’s brain would only start all over again. And in the meantime, if the agents from his country should—
“Oh, dear me, no,” Del said.
That was not a tone of voice she cared to hear from Del, either. “What?”
“Black Arrows, guys,” said Del softly.
Maj looked up in momentary panic, which became more than momentary as she saw the black shapes with their red outlines streaking toward them — five of them. But what the—
She opened her mouth, closed it again. “They’re not real Arrows!” she said.
“
“
Del and Robin were quiet for a moment. Then Robin said, “They’re slow!”
“They’re from outside the game,” Maj said. “They’re the agents — the ones that activated the microps in Laurent!”
“And the poor dumb clucks aren’t running at multiple G’s,” Del crowed. “They don’t know how far the parameters of ships can be pushed in this game.
“Then let’s not show them right away,” Maj said. “If they think the normal rules of science obtain here…”
She could just hear the others grinning. “Maj, take point,” Del said, with great relish.
“You’re on,” she said, and reached with both arms into the fighting field, the “glove-box”-like force field which the pilot of an Arbalest fighter used to manipulate ship’s weapons.
The fight that followed was a sad one…for the Arrows.
Maj dived slowly in toward the first of their enemies, watched him react as best as he could…then threw her Arbalest around at 6 G’s and cobra’d, letting him pass her, shooting him up from behind. Elsewhere, Del and Robin were using similar tactics. Each took out one of the Arrows, then went for another.
Maj went for her second enemy vessel, diving close. She passed over the other, canopy to canopy, and got a glimpse of the pilot as she twisted away from the Arrow’s fire. A woman, she thought — blond, small. Her helmet hid her eyes, but not her mouth. She was smiling, a look of great enjoyment, and she dived up and around again toward Maj, firing—
Maj followed her hard, and turned, and turned again, and fired again. The Arrow fled, but Maj pursued — and the Arrow mis-twisted, and Maj found herself sitting, most serendipitously, right on its six.
She fired, and the Arrow blew itself to shreds. Wherever that agent was, in reality, she would not be bothering Laurent again for a little while, anyway. It took a while to get a new ship in this universe.
She rejoined the others. Robin was in the act of putting one last agent out of business, blowing his Arrow to smithereens at the end of a long lazy Immelmann turn that was pure insolence in space. A ragged cheer went up from them all at the end of that. But Maj looked with concern up into the cockpit mirror…and saw that Laurent had passed out.
“Trouble. We’ve got to knock those Substantives down again.”
“Can’t, Maj!” Robin said. “No power. Showing red.”
“We have to go back, Maj,” said Del.
“But we
“If we don’t,” Del said, “we are genuinely screwed—”
“But Laurent—!”
Then Maj caught the sudden movement. She swore softly and tumbled the Arbalest in y-axis.
And with no other warning, long slender arrows came lancing past and around them through the darkness of space. Not dark ones, though, not the Archon’s ships, but, beyond belief or hope, the white lances of the
“The codes have worked,” said one of the Pilum commanders. “I repeat, the codes work. Squadron, go in and clean them up!”
All those long white shapes disappeared into the cloud. A cheer went up from Maj and Del and Robin and Charlie, and a kind of strangled hoot from Laurent. They all turned tail and made their way up and out of the nebula again—
— and came into clear view of the great arm of the Galaxy again, the light triumphant against the darkness one more time; and all the stars sang for joy.
One more Pilum came coasting down by them. “All right, you guys,” said its pilot; and Maj’s head snapped up in surprise, for she knew that voice. She peered across the darkness between them and saw James Winters riding right-hand seat in the Pilum’s forward-thrust lance, with a grim grin on his face.
“Captain Winters…”
“
“I stand relieved,” Maj said, and smiled, and slumped in her seat with relief.
“Now get out of virtual,” he said, “and for heaven’s sake go disarm the alarm system and open the front door, because about eight black-and-whites and a paramedic team from Bethesda are sitting outside waiting for you and Laurent to finish your business here, and your mom and dad are being choppered in and will be there demanding details in about five minutes.”
She had never been so glad to get offline in her life.
It was days before the dust settled. Laurent spent many of them in the hospital, having cellular rehab work done on the brain tissue which had been damaged — fortunately, not as much of it as had been feared nor was any